Celestron 31056, 31058 instruction manual T R O N O M Y B a S I C S, Celestial Coordi- nate System

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A S T R O N O M Y B A S I C S

The Celestial Coordi- nate System

This section deals with observational astronomy in general. It includes infor- mation on the night sky, polar alignment, and using your telescope for astro- nomical observations.

In order to help find objects in the sky, astronomers use a celestial coordinate system which is similar to our geographical coordinate system here on Earth. The celestial coordinate system has poles, lines of longitude and latitude, and an equator. For the most part, these remain fixed against the background stars.

The celestial equator runs 360 degrees around the Earth and separates the northern celestial hemisphere from the southern. Like the Earth’s equator it bears a reading of zero degrees. On Earth this would be latitude. However, in the sky this is now referred to as declination, or DEC for short. Lines of declination above and below the celestial equator are labeled for their angular distance from the equator. The lines are broken down into degrees, minutes, and seconds of arc. Declination readings south of the equator carry a minus sign (-) in front of the number and those north are often preceded by a plus sign

(+).

The celestial equivalent of longitude is called Right Ascension, or R.A. for short. Like the Earth’s lines of longitude, they run from pole to pole and are evenly spaced 15 degrees apart. Although the longitude lines are separated by an angular distance, they are also a measure of time. Each line of longitude is one hour apart from the next. Since the Earth rotates once every 24 hours, there are 24 lines total. The R.A. coordinates are marked off in units of time.

It begins with an arbitrary point in the constellation of Pisces designated as 0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds. All other points are designated by how far (i.e., how long) they lag behind this coordinate after it passes overhead moving toward the west.

Your Celestron telescope comes equipped with setting circles that translate the celestial coordinates into a precise location for the telescope to point. The setting circles will not work properly until you have polar aligned the telescope and set the R.A. setting circle. Note that the process of polar alignment sets the declination setting circle.

90

60

Declination

30

22

23 0

1

6

5

4

2 3

Right

Ascension

Figure 4-1

32 • Astronomy Basics

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Contents C150-HD and G-8N Newtonian Page B L E N T E N T S Celestial Photography T R O D U C T I O N How to Use this Manual Word of Caution Newtonian Optical System S E M B L I N G Y O U R N E W T O N I a N T E L E S C O P E Unpacking Your G-8NG-8N C150-HD Setting Up the Tripod Adjusting the Tripod HeightAttaching the Accessory Tray Attaching the Equatorial Mount They are needed later for polar alignmentAttaching the R.A. Slow Motion Knob Attaching the Declination Slow Motion Knob Attaching the Counterweight Bar and Counterweight Attaching the Telescope to the Mount For G-8N Attaching the Telescope to the Mount For C150- HD Removing the Lens Cap Balancing the Telescope in R.ABalancing the Telescope in DEC CompletelyG-8N C150-HD Installing the Finderscope Installing the Eye- piece Technical Specifications Image Orientation ActualVeiw NewtonianViewFocusing Aligning the Finder Your First Look Daytime ObservingNighttime Observing Calculating Magnification Determining Field of View T R O N O M Y B a S I C S Celestial Coordi- nate SystemMotion of the Stars Polar Alignment DefinitionFinding the Pole Latitude Scales Pointing at Polaris Declination Drift Aligning the R.A Setting Circle Polar Alignment FindersL E S T I a L O B S E R V I N G Observing the Moon PlanetsObserving the S u n Observing Deep-Sky ObjectsUsing the Setting Circles Star Hopping Celestial Observing Viewing Conditions TransparencySky Illumination SeeingCelestial Observing L E S T I a L P H O T O G R a P H Y Lunar Phase ISO Crescent Quarter 125 Full 250 Short Exposure Prime F o c u sPiggyback Celestial Photography Care and Cleaning of the Optics Collimation L E S C O P E M a I N T E N a N C EOr back out the holder screws more than one 1 to two 2 turns T I O N a L a C C E S S O R I E S Optional Accessories Single Axis Motor Drive System #93518 Themessiercatalog Great Orion Nebula Elliptical Galaxy List of Bright Stars For Further Reading Celestron ONE Year Warranty